https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91fqF6XqPgI
Unfortunately something's probably gonna have to break first before action is taken. Remember when the interstate bridge in the Twin Cities collapsed? Suddenly a new bridge showed up.
To get a traffic signal installed at an intersection frequently riquires a fatal accident.
My only opinion on this video is I am happy they went with the 4 track approach and the new bores instead of trying to refresh the old bores. Sometimes the cheaper approach is the dumber approach and I think this project is an example of that. BTW, as they mentioned in the video the project is not 100% dependent on Federal money and I read somewhere it has already started officially. So they must be anticipating the Federal Money is a given.
CMStPnPMy only opinion on this video is I am happy they went with the 4 track approach and the new bores instead of trying to refresh the old bores.
(And without massive delays or graft, too.)
The thing I find irritating about the current crap alternative is that it is longer and slower to provide no reduction at all in actual NEC running time. All the early Gateway designs involved high-speed grading and curvature permitting fast acceleration out of Penn Station into high-speed flyover to additional track capacity up to Newark. Instead we have an enormous outlay to bring the line right out in the same place with the same curve to the south on the Jersey side, probably to facilitate everything going through that renamed Secaucus Junction plant. This to me is as wack long-term as the Memphis airport light-rail connection, which wound up with a $4 billion price tag for a 40+ minute trip time from downtown.
I shutter every time I look at the construction timeline. I hope against reality that one of the old tubes does not have to be closed before the new bores are in full operation. What is being stated as for service after the new bores are in service is that no additional rush hour service will be started until one of the old bores has been completely rehabbed ?
Is that in anticipation of the possibility that the old bore not yet rehabbed might have to be shut for several weeks for emergency repairs ? Has anyone heard how the weekend shutdowns of one bore or the other is progressing ? Any unexpected problems or delays ?
blue streak 1I shutter every time I look at the construction timeline. I hope against reality that one of the old tubes does not have to be closed before the new bores are in full operation. What is being stated as for service after the new bores are in service is that no additional rush hour service will be started until one of the old bores has been completely rehabbed ? Is that in anticipation of the possibility that the old bore not yet rehabbed might have to be shut for several weeks for emergency repairs ? Has anyone heard how the weekend shutdowns of one bore or the other is progressing ? Any unexpected problems or delays ?
I agree in part with OVERMOD, rethink the whole design. Understood there is an investment in the existing station in the Billions but think of the time gained on the schedule of straightening out the station approaches with a newer and more direct route into Manhattan from the South.
I think as they are the bores are way too short and should extend farther inland on the New Jersey side before rising to the surface. Sell some of that freed up real estate and get the bore openings farther from the shore line.
Enter the rail bores in Newark, New Jersey, straighten the curves underground and stay underground until the station in Manhattan, increase the speeds in the tunnel bore significantly. Would also construct a 4 track bore or set of bores vs 2 track.
Across the East River I think we are pretty much screwed with the location of Sunny Side Yard and the Long Island Railroad facilities. Though the tracks could remain undergroud a little longer before Sunnyside yard to gain distance from the East River.
CMStPnPAcross the East River I think we are pretty much screwed with the location of Sunnyside Yard and the Long Island Railroad facilities.
I was never able to find a way to line up a cost-effective approach for the second-spine alternatives that do not have to 'curve' from New England near the New York station area -- for example the route via Hartford or the line using the 'outer' trans-Sound bridge completing the 'bypass' Interstate route around NYC congestion, or my beloved Orient Point Bridge route. Spending billions to allow high speed close to Penn Station is more than a bit risky until we're sure, really sure, that our training program is Bostian-free. So an approach under the Hudson from the south and west really doesn't need to be particularly fast: much more important is good reliable CBTC on extremely short headway combined with fast and reliable switching to separate inbound traffic by arriving track, or combining outgoing traffic quickly into its common bore(s).
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